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Having devoted the past ten years of his life to research
for this major new work, John Nolland gives us a commentary on the Gospel of
Matthew that engages with a notable range of Matthean scholarship and offers
fresh interpretations of the dominant Gospel in the history of the
church.

Without neglecting the Gospel's sources or historical
background, Nolland places his central focus on the content and method of
Matthew's story. His work explores Matthew's narrative technique and the inner
logic of the unfolding text, giving full weight to the Jewish character of the
book and its differences from Mark's presentation of parallel material. While
finding it unlikely that the apostle Matthew himself composed the book, Nolland
does argue that Matthew's Gospel reflects the historical ministry of Jesus with
considerable accuracy, and he brings to the table new evidence for an early date
of composition.

Including accurate translations based on the latest Greek
text, detailed verse-by-verse comments, thorough bibliographies for each
section, and an array of insightful critical approaches, Nolland's Gospel of
Matthew will stimulate students, preachers, and scholars seeking to
understand more fully Matthew's presentation of the gospel
narrative.

목차

ForewordPrefaceAbbreviationsGeneral
Bibliography

INTRODUCTION

The Authorship of the Gospel

The Gospel's Sources

Mark and "Q"

Other Sources

Oral Tradition

Larger Sets of Linked Units Related to Material in
Mark or Q

Smaller Sets of Linked Units without Parallel in
the Canonical Gospels

Summary

Sources as a Constraint

Matthew and John

How the Author Handled His Sources

From Eyewitnesses to Matthew's Sources

Matthew and His Sources as Early Church Documents

The Early Development and Role of Gospel Tradition

The Gospels and the Historical Jesus

The Date of the Gospel of Matthew

The Use of the Fall of Jerusalem as a Watershed for
Dating

Other Claimed Dating Markers

A Date before A.D. 70

The Provenance of the Gospel of Matthew

What Kind of Document Did Matthew Think He Was Writing?

Matthew and the Ancient Biographical Writings

Matthew and OT Accounts of the Lives of Key Figures

Matthew and Christian Proclamation

Matthew as a Manual for Discipleship

Matthew and Jewish Midrash

Matthew and Christian Self-Definition

Matthew and the Jewish Festal Calendar

How Matthew Intended His Gospel to Be Related to

The State of the Gospel Text

Elements of Matthew's Narrative Technique

Repetition of Formulas

Use of the Same Source Information on More than One
Occasion

Framing

Chiasm

Parallelism

Imperfect Parallelism

Internal Cross-Referencing by Means of Language
Echoes

Theme-Setting Episodes

Sectional Overlaps

Dramatisation

Matthew's Use of the OT

Text Forms Available to Matthew

Mt. 1?2

Mt. 3?9

Mt. 10?18

Mt. 19?25

Mt. 26?28

Conclusion

How Matthew Interprets the OT

Matthew's Use of Other Jewish Tradition

The Theology of the Gospel of Matthew

An Annotated Structural Outline of Matthew

COMMENTARY

The Stock from Which Jesus Comes ? and Its History
(1:1-17)

Infancy (1:18?2:23)

The Circumstances of Jesus' Birth (1:18-25)

The Visit of the Magi (2:1-12)

To Egypt and Back (2:13-23)

John Proclaiming in the Wilderness
(3:1-12)

Preparation (3:13?4:12)

Jesus Comes for Baptism by John (3:13-17)

Led by the Spirit to Be Tested by the Devil (4:1-12)

Establishing His Ministry (4:13-25)

Preaching the Kingdom Back in Galilee (4:13-17)

Calling Co-workers (4:18-22)

Itinerant Ministry in Galilee, with Influence Far
Beyond (4:23-25)

Sermon on the Mount (5:1?8:1)

Preparing to Teach Disciples and Potential Disciples
from All Israel (5:1-2)

Good News to the Poor in Spirit (5:3-10)

The Difficulties of God's People Continued and Climaxed
in Persecution for Jesus (5:11-12)

Called to Be Salt and Light (5:13-16)

Introduction to Jesus' Vision of Abundant Righteousness
(5:17-20)

Six Antitheses (5:21-48)

On Murder (5:21-26)

On Adultery (5:27-30)

On Divorce (5:31-32)

On Oaths (5:33-37)

On "An Eye for an Eye" (5:38-42)

On Love (5:43-48)

Practising Piety before Others (6:1-18)

Almsgiving (6:1-4)

Prayer (6:5-6)Excursus on Prayer (6:7-15)

Fasting (6:16-18)

Seeking the Kingdom (6:19-34)

Storing Up Treasures in Heaven (6:19-21)

Having a Healthy Eye (6:22-23)

Serving God and Not Mammon (6:24)

Do Not Be Anxious; Seek the Kingdom (6:25-34)

Making Our Relationship with God the Measure of All
Things (7:1-11)

Do Not Judge; Beware of the Beam in Your Own Eye
(7:1-5)

Do Not Give Dogs What Is Holy (7:6)

Ask; Your Father Gives Good Things (7:7-11)

The Golden Rule as the Summary of the Sermon, but Also
of the Law and the Prophets (7:12)

Challenges to Implement the Sermon (7:13-27)

Enter through the Narrow Gate (7:13-14)

Beware of False Prophets (7:15-20)

Do the Will of My Father (7:21-23)

Build Your House on the Rock (7:24-27)

He Was Teaching as One Who Had Authority (7:28?8:1)

Jesus on the Move in Ministry
(8:[1]2?9:34)

The First Day of Healings (8:[1]2-17)

Jesus Cleanses a Leper (8:2-4)

Jesus Heals a Centurion's Servant (8:5-13)

Jesus Heals Peter's Mother-in-Law (8:14-15)

General Healing: He Took Our Infirmities (8:16-17)

Miracles in a Disciple Framework (8:18?9:13)

Jesus and His Would-Be Followers (8:18-22)

Jesus Stills the Storm (8:23-27)

Jesus Sends the Demons into the Pigs (8:28-34)

Jesus Forgives and Heals a Lame Man (9:1-8)

Jesus Heals Tax Collectors and Sinners (9:9-13)

Healings in Connection with Fresh Wineskins for New
Wine (9:14-32)

New Wine Is for Fresh Wineskins (9:14-17)

Jesus Raises a Girl from Death and Rescues a Woman
from Perpetual Uncleanness (9:18-26)

Jesus Gives Sight to Two Blind People (9:27-31)

Contrasting Reactions to Jesus' Exorcism of a Mute
Man (9:32-34)

Workers for the Harvest (9:35?11:1)

"Ask the Lord of the Harvest to Send Out Workers"
(9:35-38)

Jesus Bestows Authority on the Twelve (10:1)

The Names of the Twelve Apostles (10:2-4)

Jesus Instructs the Twelve for Their Mission (10:5-42)

Instructions, Part 1 (10:5-15)

Instructions, Part 2 (10:16-23)

Instructions, Part 3 (10:24-42)

Jesus' Pattern of Ministry Is Renewed (11:1)

Seeing Clearly and Relating Rightly to God's Present
Agenda (11:2-30)

John the Baptist and Jesus (11:2-19)

"The Blind Are Seeing, and the Lame Are
Walking . . ." (11:2-6)

"My Messenger . . . Who Will Prepare
Your Way" (11:7-15)

"He Has a Demon . . . a Glutton and a
Drunkard" (11:16-19)

Rejected and Accepted by; Hidden from and Revealed to
(11:20-30)

Reproaching Privileged Towns (11:20-24)

The Good Pleasure of the Father and the Choice of the
Son (11:25-27)

"Come to Me, All Who Are Weary . . ."
(11:28-30)

Conflict with the Pharisees (12:1-50)

"The Son of Man Is Lord of the Sabbath" (12:1-8)

"It Is Permitted to Do Good on the Sabbath" (12:9-14)

The Triumph of the Gentle and the Other-Centred Servant
of God (12:15-21)

By Beelzebul or by the Spirit of God? (12:22-29)

Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit Will Not Be Forgiven
(12:30-37)

Those to Be Condemned Seek a Sign (12:38-42)

"The Last State . . . Becomes Worse than
the First" (12:43-45)

"Who Is My Mother, and Who Are My Brothers and
Sisters?" (12:46-50)

Parables of the Kingdom (13:1-53)

Speaking to the Crowds in Parables (13:1-3a)

Set 1 (13:3b-23)

The Parable of the One Who Sowed (13:3b-9)

Why Parables for the Crowds? (13:10-17)

Explanation of the Parable of the One Who Sowed
(13:18-23)

Set 2 (13:24-43)

The Parable of the Zizania among the Wheat
(13:24-30)

The Parable of the Mustard Seed (13:31-32)

The Parable of the Leaven (13:33)

Jesus' Parables Speak What Has Long Been Hidden
(13:34-35)

Explanation of the Parable of the Zizania in
the Field (13:36-43)

Set 3 (13:44-52)

The Parable of the Treasure Hidden in the Field
(13:44)

The Parable of the Very Valuable Pearl (13:45-46)

The Parable of the Fishing Net, with Interpretation
(13:47-50)

Conclusion: The Parable of the Landowner with a
Treasure (13:51-52)

Parables Completed, Jesus Moves On (13:53)

Jesus Interpreted, but Also Rejected
(13:53[54]?16:20)

Jesus Meets Unbelief in His Hometown (13:54-58)

Part 1 (14:1-36)

Herod's Opinion of Jesus (14:1-2)[Appendage] The
Death of John the Baptist (14:3-12)

Jesus Heals and Feeds the Five Thousand (14:13-21)

Jesus Came Walking on the Sea (14:22-33)

General Healing in Gennesaret (14:34-36)

Part 2 (15:1-20)

What Is It That Really Defiles? (15:1-11)

The Pharisees Who Are Blind Guides Took Offence
(15:12-14)

Explanation of the "Parable" of What Goes In and What
Comes Out (15:15-20)

Part 3 (15:21?16:20)

Jesus Heals a Canaanite Woman's Daughter (15:21-28)

Jesus Heals Many and Impresses the Crowds (15:29-31)

Jesus Feeds the Four Thousand (15:32-39)

Sign Seekers, Unable to Interpret "the Signs of the
Times" (16:1-4)

"Beware of the Leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees"
(16:5-12)

"Simon Peter Said, 'You Are the Christ, the Son of
the Living God'" (16:13-20)

Anticipating a Future through Suffering and Beyond
(16:1?17:20)

Unveiling a Future in Which Suffering Precedes
Vindication (16:21-23)

Following Jesus Involves Giving Away Your Life to Gain
It (16:24-28)

A Vision of Jesus' Glory (17:1-9)

The Suffering of John the Baptist and of Jesus
(17:10-13)

Jesus Heals Where the Faithless Disciples Had Failed
(17:14-18)

With Faith Nothing Will Be Impossible (17:19-20)

Status and Behaviour in the "Royal Family"
(17:22?18:35)

Preparing for the Fateful Journey to Jerusalem
(17:22-23)

God Does Not Tax, but Provides for His Children
(17:24-27)

Becoming as Children to Enter the Kingdom of Heaven
(18:1-5)

Avoiding Sin (18:6-9)

Woe to Those Who Cause Little Ones to Stumble
(18:6-7)

"If Your Hand . . . Causes You to
Stumble . . ." (18:8-9)

Dealing with the Sinner (18:10-35)

"Goes in Search . . .
Finds . . . Rejoices" (18:10-14)

Challenging Sin with a Concern for Restoration
(18:15-20)

Forgive Your Brother or Sister from Your Heart
(18:21-35)

Family and Possessions in View of the Kingdom
(19:1?20:16)

From Galilee to Judea (19:1-2)

Marriages and States of Celibacy Fit for the Kingdom
(19:3-12)

"Let the Children Come to Me" (19:13-15)

Giving Up All (19:16-29)

"Sell Your Possessions . . . Follow
Me" (19:16-22)

How Difficult ? but with God Possible ? for the Rich
to Enter the Kingdom (19:23-26)

What Is There for Those Who Follow and Those Who
Sacrifice? (19:27-29)

LaBible's Review

Theological Book Review“Although some may
be daunted, or perhaps even wearied, by the appearance of another massive work
on the Gospel of Matthew, readers will be pleasantly surprised that Nolland
manages to balance exegetical detail with theological perspective which has
resulted in a usable and well documented commentary.”

Journal of the Evangelical Theological
Society“A refreshingly clear and accessible contribution that
depicts the fruit of very careful, learned, and reasoned scholarship at its
finest.”

Religious Studies Review“Enormously
learned, exhaustive in its detailed textual, literary, redaction- and
source-critical comments and bibliographical material, and interesting, useful,
and accessible to a wide range of readers.”